180-gram vinyl. In 2011 Gatto Fritto sent International Feel a track called "Acdise #2" by a Japanese artist called Gonno, which International Feel then released as an EP (IFFM 001EP). It became a big tune, played by everyone from James Holden to Todd Terje, Tim Sweeney to Ewan Pearson. As hypnotic and compelling as "Acdise #2," "Obscurant" is slo-mo electronic Steve Reich packed with drama and moments of joy and "A Life With Clarinet" oozes enough emotion to overload your system. Includes a remix of "Obscurant" by Call Super, who turned Gatto Fritto on to "Acdise #2" in 2011.

180-gram vinyl. Alongside DJ Alfredo of Amnesia, Jose Padilla gave birth to the other side of the Balearic coin -- the mellow sunset side -- and influenced millions of people around the globe from Madonna to DJ Harvey. "Day One" mixes a classic Balearic sound with the "proper" deep house of Ron Trent and Chez Damier. Layers and washes of melodies running over deep beats. The B-side features a remix by Telephones, who says, "As an eclectic and open-minded DJ myself, getting the opportunity to work with one of the pioneers of the Balearic sound... didn't take much considering."

EP pressed on 180-gram vinyl. Trio Private Agenda take us back to a time when soul first met synthesizers. "Déjà Vu" is a cocktail of Linda di Franco and a Roxy Music-esque aesthetic, bound together by elements of the inventive, contemporary production values of artists such as Todd Terje and Prins Thomas. "Freefalling" proves a fitting reflection of their wider vision, finding sonic roots in early Balearicism with ethereal vocal lines over delicate percussion. The EP is wonderful introduction to their world, where production values are as detailed as they are bombastic and lyrics as reflective as they are bold.

Double Knots (Toby Tobias Smith and Daniel Mode) present an EP that Smith says was "inspired by a birthday weekend away in beautiful Herne Bay with a lovely crowd of people." Imagine Tangerine Dream soundtracking Miami Vice through Todd Terje's ears. Music for the head and the feet; an experiment in melodic, deep, synth-based melodies and soundscapes, tinged with mid-tempo house and cosmic dust. The warm and smooth rhythm of "Remote Control Memory," the groove-based Toby Tobias remix of "Double Vision," and the luscious guitar licks and heady rhythms of "Vital Connection" make for a perfect debut from Double Knots.

International Feel founder Mark Barrott loves obscure library music. This EP is the result of a tape that he found at the bottom of a bargain bin in a charity shop in Paris: Songs for Sunsets by Australian musician Len Leise, a work of synths, drum machines, and oceanic percussion. Barrott was able to track Leise down, only to learn that Leise had destroyed the original masters of Songs for Sunsets. But all was not lost -- Barrott convinced Leise to record some new material, Music for Forests, which International Feel now presents on 180-gram vinyl.

The first (and perhaps only) release from Talamanca System has been one year in the making. A single track with four interpretations, all at the hands of a new creative connection between Mark Barrott, Gerd Janson and Phillip Lauer aka Tuff City Kids, "Balanzat" features a lush medley of warm chords, soft, rolling, percussive strokes, and a retro bass line groove. It's a floating Balearic house gem, rooted in a classically groovy, U.S.-leaning framework. Also included is the twisted "Acid Reflux," a stomping Tuff City Kids remix and an ambient reprise in the "Beat Box Mix."

The artist known as "Fernando" once washed up on the shores of Uruguay after a freak boating accident off the coast of Carilo, Buenos Aires in 2008. Presumed dead, what in fact happened was a serendipitous encounter between the lucky survivor and a roaming associate of International Feel, who, during a walk along the sands of Punta Del Diablo, found an airtight USB stick clutched inside the hand of a partial amnesiac, dazed and shivering, but with a sly smile stretched across his sun- and sea-worn face. It seems that whatever Fernando was looking for, he had found, and now this EP sees the light of day.

Joel Hood transports you straight out of a cold working town and drops you into a hazy world of intercontinental sonic voyaging, taking in fragments of family holidays and adult travel adventures cut and pasted into instrumentals that evoke DJ Shadow, Twin Peaks and The Avalanches, with Hood's voice weaving between it all. Already profiled by The Guardian and Music Week, plus picking up support from Rob Da Bank and BBC6 Music, his debut EP for International Feel features four tracks of psychedelic fusion carrying hints of '80s nostalgia amidst hedonistic futurism.

International Feel channels the two forces of The Young Gentlemen's Adventure Society and The Parada 88 into one very special 12". Here are two stone-cold killer club records that came out separately in 2011 with super-limited pressings. A rare collector's dream, "Adventure Party" currently goes for silly money on Discogs, and both records in their original incarnations caused a riot amongst disco vinyl junkies. Notably, there was an actual riot in a Japanese store when the 30 limited and hand-pressed copies of Parada 88 went on sale. And it's not surprising, really: "You're Gonna Miss Me" is a proper Italo house-banger of epic proportions.

Balearic is a feeling -- and José Padilla embodies it. Solito marks three special moments: 40 years of Padilla as a DJ, his return to Café Del Mar after 15 years, and the first sign of a new partnership with label International Feel, who will release his artist album in 2015. "Solito" is a soft and inviting wash of North African mysticism, warm and dusty beats, and a heat-haze bass line that Frankie Knuckles would have been proud of. Recorded in Padilla's living room with Mark Barrott from International Feel as producer. Includes a remix by Bubble Club.